April 10,2008:
The U.S. Army has, for the last sixty years, turned down most recruits
with a criminal record. The reason was that, since an army depended on
discipline to function, anyone who broke the law had already demonstrated
problems with following orders. Before September 11, 2001, the army found that
27 percent of recruits with criminal records (and given a "moral waiver" to
enlist), didn't finish their enlistment because of misconduct (refusing to obey
orders, or just a bad attitude). This was twice the rate of troops who did not
need a moral waiver. Back then, less than four percent of recruits got moral
waivers. That usually required references from teachers, clergy or employers
attesting to how the applicant had shaped up, and was worthy of acceptance. But
since 2004, the percentage of recruit getting in with moral waivers has tripled
to 13 percent. Yet there has not been a noticeable decline in troops
quality.There is still a higher
percentage of moral waiver recruits getting discharged early, but not double the
rate of those without moral waivers.
The army
has found ways to lower its traditional admission standards, yet still get
people who can perform well in a professional force.This is not just the case with those who do
poorly on written tests, or did not finish high school. It's especially the
case with those allowed in on waivers. The most common items waived are medical
conditions, criminal records or drug use, in that order. For example, many
urban recruits have asthma problems. If the recruit is headed for a job that
does not require the kind of physical effort that low grade asthma would
interfere with, a waiver would be granted. If a prospect has a low grade (no
felonies) criminal record, and appears to have moved on from that sort of
thing, a waiver is possible. Same with prior drug use. Prospects are made aware
of the regular, unannounced, drug tests for troops on active duty. Asking for
testimonials from responsible adults helps deal with those seeking moral
waivers. The army also has new psychological tests that indicate those that
have put their bad behavior behind them, and which haven't.
As a
practical matter, the army is using more cash, and more science, to attract,
and then retain, less educated recruits. That's right, while recruiting bonuses
have gone up, the percentage of high school graduates among recruits has
declined. Last year, 71 percent of recruits were high school grads. The others
had to complete a high school equivalency exam. Five years ago, 92 percent were
high school grads.
The army
has long used statistical analysis of recruit records, and the subsequent
performance of those soldiers, to work up a profile of recruits that appear
risky, but are not. Many recruits with physical or psychological problems are
harder, and often impossible, to train. Those with criminal tendencies are
often disciplinary problems, even after training, and many of these have to be
discharged before their term of service is up. However, after studying millions
of recruits, the army has refined its parameters for what kind of person will
make a successful soldier. So waivers are not as risky as they used to be, nor
are high school dropouts and those who score lower on the aptitude tests.
But there
is always risk, and greater cost. These recruits are more expensive to train,
and many of them get tossed out later. But the majority do well. This is not
popular among the officers and NCOs in units that have to do the tossing. So
far, this new category of recruits has accounted for about a thousand additional
troops getting "fired" each year. Those who do succeed, will have higher rates
of disciplinary problems for as long as they stay in. That's a hundred or so
additional courts martial a year.
A lot of
the new screening and training techniques come from civilian firms, with
similar problems. But the army has innovated as well. Partly because of the
unique aspects of military life, and partly because the army is getting a lot
of opportunity to perform in this area. What the army is doing now has long
been proposed by social reformers who believed the military should be used to
upgrade the education and work skills of those who failed to get them at home
or in the public schools. There was such an experiment during the Vietnam War
(Project 100,000). The army resisted taking these 100,000 recruits, that
normally would have been rejected. But the army did learn that many of the
100,000 made good soldiers. Since then, the lessons of Project 100,000 have
grown and evolved, until the army is widening its recruit pool in order to keep
its strength up in wartime.